Development of the REFOCUS intervention to increase mental health team support for personal recovery
Volume
207
Pagination
544 - 550
Publisher
DOI
10.1192/bjp.bp.114.155978
Journal
British Journal of Psychiatry
Issue
ISSN
0007-1250
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Background
There is an emerging evidence base about best practice in supporting recovery. This is usually framed in relation to general principles, and specific pro-recovery interventions are lacking.
Aims
To develop a theoretically based and empirically defensible new pro-recovery manualised intervention – called the REFOCUS intervention.
Method
Seven systematic and two narrative reviews were undertaken. Identified evidence gaps were addressed in three qualitative studies. The findings were synthesised to produce the REFOCUS intervention, manual and model.
Results
The REFOCUS intervention comprises two components: recovery-promoting relationships and working practices. Approaches to supporting relationships comprise coaching skills training for staff, developing a shared team understanding of recovery, exploring staff values, a Partnership Project with people who use the service and raising patient expectations. Working practices comprise the following: understanding values and treatment preferences; assessing strengths; and supporting goal-striving. The REFOCUS model describes the causal pathway from the REFOCUS intervention to improved recovery.
Conclusions
The REFOCUS intervention is an empirically supported pro-recovery intervention for use in mental health services. It will be evaluated in a multisite cluster randomised controlled trial (ISRCTN02507940).